Legalized marijuana is having important legal impact on state property rules, and estate law is no exception. In “pot legal” states, estate planning attorneys are faced with questions about the transferability of cannabis assets to an estate or trust, and existing rules affecting distribution to beneficiaries. If an estate planning…
New York Estate Planning Lawyer Blog
An Estate Planner’s Guide to “Cultural Property” Rights
From the 1980s forward, patrimony laws have impacted major museum institutions around the globe. As source countries filed lawsuits against the cultural agents of former colonial empires, requesting return of antiquities and other cultural property, the response to due diligence by those foreign jurisdictions continues to be uneven. Conflicts over…
Planning an Effective Trust Diversification Strategy
The fiduciary responsibility to create an effective estate investment plan is something that some trustees and administrators find to be a challenge. Trust laws allow estate planning clients a fair amount of control and flexibility in asset diversification. If the goal is to generate income while minimizing taxes, and protecting…
FIRRMA Expands CFIUS Oversight of Foreign Investor ATS Declarations
The recent Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”) announcement about federal enactment of a substantial piece of legislation that will likely delay close of some foreign direct investment (“FDI”) deals overseen by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (“CFIUS”). The Act supports CFIUS regulatory response to the evolution…
Protecting Your Inheritance from RICO Violations
The intent to commission, conspire to commission, or commission of a criminal act through intimidation, coercion, or solicitation of another for “racketeering activity” as defined by the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization (RICO) Act is illegal in New York. The RICO Act prohibits enterprises, including family businesses, from fraudulent and…
The New Rules to International Estate Planning
As of 2018, cross-border families planning an estate will require an investment plan meeting relevant rules to domicile, succession, generation-skipping transfer, and gift tax laws in each country where distribution will occur at the time of a decedent’s death. International estate planners use investment techniques specific to cross-border transfers and…
Foreign Pension Plan Contribution and Taxation
U.S. citizens currently residing and working abroad and foreign residing in the United States who are participating in a foreign retirement contribution plan, should evaluate the most recent federal Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) tax reporting requirements to avoid penalties on those assets or future estate transfer. Foreign pension fund contributions…
Financial Capacity the Key to Avoiding Probate Controversy
By 2060, the population of the United States 65 years and older will more than double, increasing to over 98 million from 46 million in 2016. Coinciding with this demographic change will be the estimated 14 million elders diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and other related disorders associated with the onset…
FAPT vs. DAPT: The Comparative Advantages of Trust Asset Protections
When planning a will, estate, or trust, protecting assets from taxation is a primary concern. Today, U.S.-based estate planning investors have the option of offshore or onshore trust formation. Rooted in the English common law traditions of wealth and property protections, the offshore tax-exempt Foreign Asset Protection Trust (“FAPT”) of…
Estate Enrichment from Wrongful Death Compensation
On the two-year anniversary of the Artist known as “Prince’s” opioid overdose related death in April 2018, the representative of his Estate sued the Walgreens company and an Illinois Hospital for damages. Like New York, Illinois law allows the representative of a decedent’s estate to pursue a wrongful death action…